Year: 2006 (Page 110 of 228)

Box Office Roundup: Nacho business donkey wrestler

Based on Sunday’s estimates, courtesy of boxofficemojo.com:

1) Cars: $31.1 million ($114.5 million, second week)
The good news: it held the #1 spot for two weeks. The bad news: it fell off 48% from its opening week. The word is getting out: Pixar laid its first egg. Go see “Over the Hedge” again instead.
2) Nacho Libre: $27.5 million (first week)
For God’s sake, is anyone going to make a decent movie this month?
3) The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift: $24 million (first week)
Two movies in the top five about racing, and “Talladega Nights” is on the horizon. It’s a great big NASCAR world.
4) The Lake House: $13.6 million (first week)
Or, “Give the audience a happy ending, no matter how implausible or insulting it may be.”
5) The Break-Up: $9.5 million ($91.9 million, third week)
Chicago deserves to have better movies shot there than “The Lake House” and this.

Only two months to the day until “Snakes on a Plane.” And still no trailer. They’re killing us.

Save Screech’s house

Or don’t. Poor Dustin Diamond who played “Screech” on TV’s “Saved By The Bell” is trying to raise $250,000 through t-shirt sales so he won’t have to give up his house. Apparently, though, the big news according to this weeks “Best Week Ever” on VH1 was Diamond’s appearance on Howard Stern’s show where he discussed how big his penis is. Certainly he could always go into 1337 prOn if his shitty shirts don’t sell.

Best, memo, ever

God bless Hot Blog for posting this memo from “South Park” co-creator Matt Stone to the MPAA regarding their ongoing battle to find a compromise with the content in their movie “South Park: Bigger, Longer, and Uncut.” The memo, quite simply, speaks for itself.

In the ring with Jared Hess

With “Napoleon Dynamite” finally behind him, writer/director Jared Hess will try to duplicate the cult success with the release of the new Jack Black comedy, “Nacho Libre.” Jared found time in his incredibly busy schedule to sit down and talk with Bullz-Eye.com, and after speaking with him for only a couple of minutes it was clear that this guy is Napoleon Dynamite (though he only admitted to being 85%). Jared also discussed more about the world of Luche Libres, his earlier experiences working on independent features, and what the future has in store for him.

BE: What possesses you to create such oddball characters, and why do you think they’re so appealing?

JH: I’m just very interested in characters and personalities that you’re not really used to seeing on screen. Hector was someone who came to one of the first auditions in Mexico City, and Mike White was in town, and he was actually auditioning for a different role. After he was done, I said “this guy can play this character and this character, but ultimately we decided that the dynamic between him and Jack was too much fun, and it was too hard to pass up.

BE: I completely agree. Hector was by far the best part of the film, and it’s always nice to see a pure comedic duo. In fact, “Dynamite” and “Nacho” are what I like to refer to as pure comedies. And by that I mean that it carries a PG rating. Do you feel that, as a Mormon, you bring a different style of filmmaking to Hollywood?

JH: Yeah. Just the accumulation of experiences for me growing up and how I was raised. You know, I moved around a whole lot, and coming from a big Mormon family of six boys, and all those things have an effect on the type of filmmaker that I am. I don’t really think about a rating when I’m involved in something, it’s just whatever better serves the characters and the story. That’s what I try and stay focused on.

BE: It seems that the Mormon film community has its own little genre – my personal favorite being “God’s Army” – but you actually worked as a camera assistant on “The R.M.,” possibly one of the most popular Mormon comedies. How was that experience being a novice entering the industry?

JH: I worked as a camera assistant, and started interning for a cinematographer when I was fourteen. And when I was in college, working as a crew member totally helped to pay the bills at the time. I think that I learned a lot from a production standpoint while working on different independent films, and just learning the logistics and what was required to make the movie. Any kind of experience definitely helps that wants to be a director or work in this town.

BE: Well, that experience has certainly paid off. You’ve actually established yourself as a quirky director in the same vein as Wes Anderson. Is this a trend that you plan on continuing to follow, or is this just your comedic prowess hard at work?

JH: I just want the freedom to do what inspires me, and to make films that I would want to see myself. Whatever that it is, it just comes down to how I see things, and how I want to do things.

Click here to read the full interview.

Let us guess: It involves a hot young gardener?

eva

Eva Longoria plans to write an erotic novel, according to reports quoted in The Book Standard:

“They offered a huge deal and I like the idea of seeing my book on a shelf,” she said on the website. “The plot’s top secret so far but let’s just say I have a wild imagination.”

Far be it from us to question the erotic power of Ms. Longoria’s “wild” imagination — or the marketability of the end product, for that matter — but we still can’t help wondering whether this latest addition to our nation’s proud literary heritage will include not only a shirtless lawn boy half the heroine’s age, but ALSO a beguilingly feisty parking lot attendant.

Only time will tell.

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